Who could have predicted that the 80s game of Pong would spawn a multi-billion dollar gaming industry complete with PCs, PDAs, and wireless phones that are specifically planned
to handle the speed and graphics that todays games demand?
If you think that current gaming technology is hot then, as they say, "you aint seen nothing yet."
Wireless or mobile gaming is the future and the future is now. 2004 viewed
an explosion in mobile gaming technology which redefined the mobile phone as a gaming device. Handsets capable of displaying graphics equal in quality to the GameStations and GameCubes of the 1990s were available everywhere, and game developers like Synergetix and Its Alive! were on everyones radar screen.
Now, just a year later, Real-instant multiplayer games, some offering high-quality, 3D graphics, could be
played over most telecom networks at prices that wont put you in the poorhouse.
Never one to be too far behind the bleeding edge, even the Adult Entertainment industry is turning out PDA and cell phone-based games including gambling programs and a variety of role-based and action games where lots of sexy women finish
up losing their clothes. The graphics are, shall we say, stunning.
A peek under the technology hood
While the average gamer could be
ignorant of the technology that is driving the wireless gaming industry, the geeks among us are very familiar with terms like J2ME, Symbian, and Brew; the development and distribution platforms upon which the wireless gaming industry has built its success.
J2ME (Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition) is a derivative of Sun Microcomputers JAVA development platform. J2ME is specifically planned
to make applications that run on portable and wireless devices including cell phones and PDAs. Its also finding wide acceptance among companies that develop applications for TV boxes and many of the new embedded devices which are flooding both the consumer and industrial markets.
BREW, another development language from QUALCOMM, provides a development platform thats also suited for the wireless industry. BREWs claim to fame is that fact that the developer might
write device-independent applications which do not absolutely need to be recompiled for different phone manufacturers.
SYMBIAN is most likely the most commonly used OS in the game-enabled wireless telephone sell
. Embraced by all major phone manufacturers, SYMBIAN supports J2ME, BREW, C++, and JAVA.
So, what does the future hold for this high-technology
blockbuster thats still in its infancy?
According to industry analysts Frost & Sullivan, the "global mobile game industry, which generated US$436.4 million in 2002, will balloon to US$9.34 billion by 2008." Asia is at the epicenter of the wireless gaming explosion where an estimated 500 million all the people are wireless Internet subscribers and two out of five are wireless gamers.
Some gaming fortune tellers predict that the convergence of GPS and wireless gaming technology will result in live-action and role playing games that will adapt themselves to the players physical location and include geographic-clear-cut scenarios that change as the player moves to new locations.
Judging by the progress thats been made in the last two years alone, the future of wireless gaming could be
the most revenue and employment-generating technology of the 21st century.